MAM
Tesla’s Elon Musk unlikely to buy Twitter; may face legal consequences
Mumbai: After a lot of speculation, Tesla chief executive officer Elon Musk has pulled out of the $44 billion deal to buy Twitter which he inked back in April.
Musk stepped back with an announcement, in a regulatory filing, on Friday that he would drop his $44 billion offer to buy Twitter. Musk’s lawyers stated that Twitter has failed to respond to their multiple requests for information about fake accounts.
According to a letter sent to Twitter on behalf of the Tesla chief’s, Elon Musk is terminating his $44 billion deal to buy Twitter, citing multiple breaches of the purchase agreement. The letter said that Musk is terminating the merger agreement because Twitter violates several provisions of that agreement.
Also Read: The Twitter-Elon Musk tussle: To be ‘bot’ or not to be
Reacting to this, Twitter chairman Bret Taylo, said the board will take a legal route to enforce the merger agreement. He tweeted, “The Twitter Board is committed to closing the transaction on the price and terms agreed upon with Musk and plans to pursue legal action to enforce the merger agreement.”
According to the agreement, Musk will have to pay $1 billion if he fails to make the complete transaction for the deal.
Musk had threatened to cancel the transaction unless the business could demonstrate that less than 5 percent of members on the social media platform were made up of
spam and bot accounts.
The billionaire and the 16-year-old San Francisco-based corporation are likely to engage in a protracted legal battle as a result of the ruling.
MAM
Visa appoints Suresh Sethi as India country head
MUMBAI: In India’s fast-moving payments race, Visa has just swiped in a new leader. The company has named Suresh Sethi as its India country head, marking a key leadership shift as it sharpens its focus on digital payments growth in the market. Sethi steps into the role following his recent exit from Protean eGov Technologies, where he served as chief executive officer. He succeeds Sandeep Ghosh, who has moved on after more than four years at Visa to pursue an external opportunity.
The appointment comes at a time when Visa is doubling down on its expansion strategy across India and the wider region, deepening partnerships and accelerating adoption in an increasingly competitive digital payments ecosystem.
Sethi brings with him a broad, cross-market perspective shaped by decades of experience across corporate banking, retail financial services, mobile money and large-scale government technology initiatives. He began his career at Citigroup, where he spent 14 years working across India, Africa, South America and the United States, focusing on transaction banking services within the corporate bank.
His appointment signals a blend of institutional experience and market familiarity qualities that could prove critical as Visa navigates a landscape where fintech innovation, regulatory evolution and consumer adoption are all accelerating at once.
As digital payments in India continue to scale rapidly, the leadership change underscores a simple reality, in a market where every tap, scan and swipe counts, who leads the charge can matter just as much as the technology itself.







